Here’s a little challenge for
your next dive trip: poll your fellow
divers for their opinions on
tipping and see if you come up
with a consensus. Chances are this
question will stir the waters more
than any other topic short of shark
feeding. That’s what we found
when reviewing results from last
year’s tipping surv e y, to which 200
readers responded. While not
enough for statistically significant
results, it gives us a good sense of
how our fellow divers view the
problem .
Statistically, 78 percent of the
respondents told us that they contribute
to the tip pool on a liveaboard
dive boat. Thirty percent
sometimes separately tip dive
guides, 11 percent may tip the
skipper, and 22 percent might
also take care of individual crew
members.
At resorts that include diving,
74 percent tip dive guides, 38
percent take care of the
skipper( s ) , and 40 percent tip the
c r e w. Where a separate operator
handles the diving, these percentages
go up: 75 percent tip the
guide, 49 percent tip the skipper
and 47 percent tip the crew.
Beyond the numbers, opinions
varied wildly on why, when
and how much to tip. Comments
ranged from the miserly (like “I
didn’t tip the airline crew that got
me here,” or “I don’t get tipped
for doing my job”) to saintly (“It’s
the perfect entrepreneurial
reward system”). Tipping etiquette
is also obviously a matter
of real concern, for a variety of
reasons.
Pointing Out
Critters Earns Tips
Many folks tip a certain percentage
of their trip price (net of
a i rfare). Others base tips on
exceptional service. Reasons
given for tipping dive guides
include: personal attention (such
as offering special help or lending
equipment), good briefings,
pointing out interesting critters,
having a pleasant attitude, staying out of the way when not needed,
and encouraging preservation of
the marine environment.
Sharon Costello of Pasadena,
Calif., rewards guides who
enforce “good buoyancy control
and a ‘hands-off’ reef policy.”
Wayne Hasson says that Aggressor skippers
may withhold tips and salary until a
recalcitrant employee shapes up. |
Skippers are usually tipped for finding good sites, getting
involved with the divers (helping
with gear, socializing) or taking
special requests. Crew members
typically receive gratuities for setting
up and filling tanks, assisting
with gear, and helping divers into
or out of the boat. Michael Lewis
of Chantilly, Va., also listed “cleanliness
and food quality” as reasons
for tipping the crew.
Walter Brenner (Wayne, Pa.,)
considers the cook the most
important person after the skipper:
“If they give special attention
to requests, good coffee or tea;
(etc.) they get an early tip.” But
John and Patty Turbeville of
Bradenton, Fla., reported a chef
on an unnamed live-aboard who
dished up bologna sandwiches all
week until the night before the
tip envelopes came out. Suddenly
dinner improved immensely, but
not enough to win over the
Turbevilles. “We tipped every o n e
else well,” they told us, “and specified
a smaller percent for him in
our ‘pot’ envelope.”
Other reasons for withholding
tips included unfriendliness,
inexperience, lack of help,
unnecessary delays, restrictive
dive practices, or bad advice.
A major area of controversy is
the notion of tipping to a pot
rather than individually, especially
when the dive operator establishes
ground rules for tipping.
The most frequently cited operoperator
was Peter Hughes’ Dancer fleet, which includes the following
recommendations in the
planning guide sent to all passengers
with their trip confirmations:
“If the crew performs to your
expectations, may we suggest 10
percent of the package price
would be normal, entirely at the
discretion of the guest. It is the
policy of the Dancer fleet to pool
any collected gratuities and
divide these equally among the
crew, since we believe that no
one crew member has the opportunity
to give exceptional service
without the assistance and support
of all other crew members.”
They print this policy on tip
envelopes that each passenger
receives on board. Several readers
tell us it is often mentioned in
briefings at the beginning and
end of the voyage.
Legendary underwater photographer
Jim Church describes
a similar policy on the Aggress or
fleet. Crew members who receive
individual tips must put them
into the pool, and the captain
divides them up equally among
the entire staff. “I personally
agree with this philosophy,” says
Church. “Giving ‘special tips’ in
my opinion, can divide a crew.
While one crew member may have
been personally helpful and attentive
to a guest, and the guest wants
to ‘reward this tireless soul,’ another
unseen crew member may have
worked all night to make sure the
toilets flushed, the vessel had fresh
w a t e r, didn’t sink and that the lights
went on in the cabin when the guest
flicked the switch. There are many
‘unsung heros’.” Several resorts follow
a similar policy.
Some readers appreciate the
convenience of having every t h i n g
spelled out for them, and not having
to decide to tip different individuals.
Allan Hudson of Caledonia, Mich.,
finds such guidelines “a very appropriate
measure because many (especially
non- Americans) need to know
this is a service industry and the
employees rely on tips to survive.”
On the other hand, Bruce
Cohen of Chatham, Pa., considers
the practice high pressure and
“extremely offensive.” He says, “The
operation should pay their staff
appropriately and incorporate (that
expense) into trip cost.” Ray and
Cheryl Stobaugh of Atkins, Ark.,
agree: “We don’t mind tipping but
we should not be paying wages.”
And Larry Lovecchio of Ignacio,
Colo., feels, “it sullies the dive experience
for me and other divers I’ve
been with if tipping becomes the
topic of conversation.”
The Florida Keys and Cozumel
were frequently cited as destinations
where dive staff heavily pushed tipping. The Cayman government
requires that an automatic 15
percent gratuity be added on
hotel rooms. At the other end of
the spectrum, nations such as
Australia, New Zealand, and
Papua New Guinea traditionally
have not followed the practice of
tipping, although American visitors
are probably changing that
quaint custom. Lorna Weible of
Spring, Texas, points out that
Dive Makai in Kona and Chris
Sawyer in the U.S. Virgins “never
mentioned or acted like they
expected tips ... And they are two
of the best we’ve been with.”
Will Your Tip in the
Pot be Distributed?
Another major objection to
tip pools is lack of control over
where the money goes. Some
employees, who have an opportunity
to affect the quality of a
diver ’s experience, are clearly
more valuable than others. Is a
chocolate on your pillow really
worth as much as a once-in-a-lifetime
encounter with an exotic
fish?
Plus, you never know how fairly
the pooled tips are actually disbursed.
Last year the Hyatt
Regency Grand Cayman was hit
with 65 criminal counts of illegally
withholding US$1.5 million in
collected tips for more than six
years. According to charges filed
by the Cayman Islands
Department of Labour, the
money was diverted to mid-management
and clerical staff, who
do not qualify for gratuities
under Cayman laws.
That raises the question,
“Who does qualify for tips?”
Here at home, you’d never think
of tipping a professional, such as
your doctor or dentist. But
where ’s the demarcation in the
dive world? Surely, a boat skipper
is a professional. You wouldn’t ,
for instance, tip the captain of an
ocean liner. What about a resort
manager? One rule of thumb is
to tip captains and managers
only if they do something
extraordinary for you. And, of
course, owners should never be
tipped. If your resort uses an outside
dive operator, those folks
often don’t share in any pooled
tips, so you might want to reward
them separately for good service.
Anything can happen to pooled
tips after your departure. Readers
Janice Summers and Harold
Bedoukian were shocked to learn
that tips they and others contributed
to the pot on the Truk Aggressor last
year were arbitrarily withheld from
one employee for disciplinary reasons.
Wayne Hasson, who runs the
franchised Aggressor fleet, confirms
that the policy for all Aggressor boats
allows skippers to withhold tips and
salary until a recalcitrant employee
shapes up. In the Truk in cident ,
both tip and salary were withheld for
a few days. The crew member was
eventually let go, after the withheld
salary and tips had been paid to
him, says Hasson.
But that was not good enough
for the Bedoukians. They wrote to
Hasson: “When tip money is left to
be equally distributed, it belongs to
the crew. To use it any other way is
immoral and illegal as it was given in
trust. If a crew member owes the
Aggresso something or needs discip
l i n a ry action, this must come from
another source, such as salary, not
from tips. At no time does the
Aggressor have the arbitrary right to
withhold a tip.” To which we can
only add, right on!
These are not isolated incidents,
by the way. We’ve received similar
reports from live-aboards and resorts
from the Caribbean to the South
Pacific. Too often, higher-paid managers
or skippers take the lion’s
share before distributing the rest to
the staff.
Some folks tip about half the suggested
amount to the pool and then
personally take care of diveguides
and crew members who provide
exceptional service. While the intent
is to offer an instant award, some
operators only distribute pooled tips
monthly — or even annually!
Therefore, employees who are let go
before tips are distributed often lose
their share of the allocation.
But many live-aboards and resorts
actually insist that individual tips be thrown into the pot as well, and
failing to do so may be a firing
offense. If you’ve gotten close
enough to a crew member to
consider taking extra
care of him, ask
about such policies.
You don’t want your
good intentions to
backfire on the poor
guy! One way to get
around such rules is
to offer non-cash
gifts. T-shirts, CDs, or
extraneous dive gear seem to be
welcome items.
$18,000 a Year in
Tips in Indonesia?
Although our readers reported
tip guidelines ranging from 7
percent (CoCo View on Roatan)
up to 15 percent (Kona
Aggresso), 10 percent seems to be
the most common recommendation
of both live-aboards and
resorts. Nice and tidy, and easy to
figure. But when you break it
down, 10 percent could be downright
extravagant. A typical liveaboard
operating 50 weeks a year
with 16 passengers each paying
$1,800 would generate
$1,440,000 in charges. Tips of 10
percent would create a pool of
$144,000. If split by eight crew
members, each would get
$18,000 over and above their
salaries. That could be four or
five times the average annual
income in a lot of third world
countries — for a job that
includes room and board. And a
few operators even try to lump
a i rfare into the tipping equation!
So who gets this?
What formula can you follow
when there is no tip pool? Ly n n
Rogers, of St. Peters, Mo., asks
ahead for the non-diver package
cost, which she
subtracts from the
diving - inclusive price to determine
the value of the
dive package.
Then she bases her
tips to the dive staff
on a percentage of
that amount.
Jimmy Williams of Norristown, Pa.,
generally tips diveguides $3 per
tank “with a tendency to round
upwards.”
In the end tipping, like confession, is a
matter of conscience. Don’t be intimidated;
just do what feels right, considering
the circumstances |
By comparison, the American
tour company, Lost Wo r l d
Adventures, which offers guided
travel in exotic locales, recommends
tipping local guides $5-$10
per day. Our editor, Ben Davison,
has traveled with them in several
South American countries and
found the professional guides very
pleased with $10 per day.
Once you’ve determined how
much to tip, the next pressing
question is: when? Some people
have found that a little cash upfront
moves them to the top of
the list for exceptional service. In
Cuba, I was dismayed by my divemaster
Martin’s lack of communication
and attention through my
first three days of diving. Then
another guest told me he tipped
daily. The next day my boatmates
and I each slipped Martin a fiver,
and suddenly his English
improved immensely. He even
offered us fresh drinking water
for the first time all week!
However, others have had
opposite experiences. When the
Wave Dancer had to return to
Belize City a day early last year,
several passengers elected to stay
on board for the evening. Pat
Wikstrom of Warne, N.C. notes,
“since the staff had already been
given their tip when we cleared
our tabs on the ride back, they
were no longer as interested in
providing the legendary Peter
Hughes service.” In the end, tipping,
like confession, is a matter
of conscience. Don’t be intimidated;
just do what feels right, considering
the circumstances at
hand. (Every dive trip will present
different circumstances.) Here
are a few more guidelines to
make the process go smoother:
Don’t assume that a “service fee” includes gratuities. Sand
Dollar Dive and Photo in Bonaire
tacks 10 percent or more onto all
purchases, but they don’t specify
what it’s for. We’ve found in some
luxury resorts a service fee gets
applied to such incidentals as
flowers in the rooms and “free”
T-shirts, before it’s parceled out
to staff.
Tip in cash. Boat and resort personnel
may not be able to cash atraveler ’s check in their home count
ry or collecting credit card tips
from management. And, at least in
American venues, cash is only taxed
when it’s declared.
Consider the downturn in diver
travel. And the standard of living. A
buck goes a lot farther in the
Solomons than it does in Hawaii.
And, let’s be practical. Do you
plan to come back to the same boat
or resort any time soon? How
would you like to be treated on
your return?
Most of all, relax and have a
good time. Enjoy the people you’re
with — both fellow guests and staff.
The rest should come naturally.